Top 5 Mormons We Love To Hate

The news is out: everybody hates us. Those of us with healthy persecution complexes anticipated this day and even looked forward to it as evidence of our righteousness. But guess what, Mormons — some of you are ESPECIALLY hated, loathed and reviled, thereby showing yourselves to be even more righteousy than the rest of us. So, congrats O scorned ones, you are probably top of the heap in heaven already. Without further ado, here’s the A-list, the creme de la creme, the (currently living) Mormons that get more hatin’ than all the rest.

5. Stephenie Meyer.

In case you’ve been living in an abandoned missile silo over the last five years, Stephenie Meyer is the most popular Mormon author since Moroni and is the one responsible for injecting the term “Team Edward” into our daily conversations. THANKS A LOT. She also invented glittering emo vampires.

A lot of people think that her books are terrible. They might be right, but Orson Scott Card thinks she’s a genius. How about this: you get to complain about Stephenie’s lack of talent after YOU’VE sold over 100 million copies of your books and had them translated into 37 different languages. Her husband, “Pancho,” has ‘retired’ to take care of the kids. So now even the more traditional Mormon can hate Stephenie, if only for this obvious perversion of the Right Way to Raise Children (TM).

4. Harry Reid.

The Senator from Nevada is the most famous Mormon politician since Reed Smoot, and he is just about as popular. A notorious pork-barreler and Democrat, Harry Reid is anathema to anyone with a lick of political good sense. Sen. Reid is responsible for canceling both firesides and mosques, showing him to be an equal opportunity offender of all religion. Clearly he is a MINO and not to be trusted.

Another reason to dislike Harry Reid: he is single-handedly to blame for a major percentage of political bloggernacle posts. That realization should be enough to galvanize even the most atheistic socialist among you. I’m sure that Sen. Reid plays the game of being a Mormon — heaven knows we see enough comments from people who happen to be in his ward — but I’m sure Satan hits 100% home teaching as well. He’s not fooling anybody.

3. Mitt Romney.

Now we’re in the big leagues of Mormon hate. Just consider the litany against Mitt Romney:

Son of wealthy businessman and politician

BYU and Harvard grad

Mission in France

Track record of running enormously successful companies

Excellent hair

Man, no wonder people hate him. Oh sure, you could point to his shifting positions on health care, abortion, gun control, and gay rights, but those alone would never have been enough to merit the level of rancor that Mitt receives on a regular basis. His suggestion that we “double Guantanamo” or his efforts to establish his cred as a hunter (of rodents and small animals, apparently) pale in comparison to the crime of his polished demeanor and perfect coiffure.

Mitt Romney brought Mormons into the political landscape with a crash and a thud. The interplay of politics in our religion was placed under the microscope and found wanting. Our cultural weirdness was magnified a thousand times. So, thanks Mitt, for dragging us all into that morass. Can’t wait for it to happen again!
2. Jay Bybee.

Jay Bybee is an upstanding new justice on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. A BYU grad (and BYU Law grad), Bybee has had a long and illustrious career of writing and teaching about some of the most important aspects of the law and our Constitution.

Oh, and then he went to work for George Bush and was responsible for the Torture Memo. Intense mental anguish, stress positions, waterboarding and other acts widely considered to be torture instead became legally permissible as part of the War on Terror. And Jay Bybee signed the memos that gave the CIA its golden shield for acts committed at Abu Ghraib and who knows where else. Bybee’s memo was quickly repudiated by the succeeding administration, but by that point Bybee had resigned and taken a federal judgeship. Some speculated that such was his reward for what is unquestionably the boldest statement of presidential power in history. One reporter pontificated, “The Bybee memo is not some oddball exercise in moral relativism but instead provides the most coherent explanation of how this Bush administration came to believe that to assure freedom and security at home and abroad, it should ape the tactics of brutal dictators.”

Thanks Jay!!

1. Glenn Beck.

Was this really so surprising? One of the most successful news commentary programs in TV history. Multiple books on bestseller lists. An enormous popular following. Glenn Beck is so popular that he would probably still be hated, even were he to abandon his comic brand of right-wing ideology, his (self-described) rodeo clown antics and ridiculous pretenses at education. His fundamental message — that of fervent adherence to the Constitution and a return to traditional American values — seems laudable. Of course, this message comes packaged in a particularly off-putting melange of conspiracy theory, hate-mongering and comical political hysteria.

There seems little that we can add to a discussion of Glenn Beck at this point. For those of you who might still be on the fence about him, I will only include this additional tidbit of information to sway you: Glenn Beck killed my parents. Mowed them down like they were Sandpeople.

Love it! The gospel must be true for us to have five prominent Mormons at once for people to hate. And they do sort of deflect some of the criticism away from leaders who engineered the Prop 8 debacle.

I have started taking his advice, that I read his prospectus on investments in gold, ponder it carefully, then pray to see if God wants me to buy gold at double the market price. See, he really is just like Moroni.

I’m sorry about Glenn killing your parents, but I also sense in your tone a certain disdain for Sandpeople. “Mowed them down like they were Sandpeople?” I hope you can learn to be more science-fictionally correct. (It’s the Higher Law of political correctness.) That said, I still think Glenn deserves the #1 “most hated Mormon” spot.

I’m trying to figure out if this list is descriptive or prescriptive. Personally, I like Glenn Beck––his show is like one of those painfully embarrassing but-oh-so-funny testimony meetings that make the congregation squirm and cast panic-stricken glances about the chapel as they try to find an exit. You know, the “PLEASE-GOD-GIVE-ME-CANCER-NOW!!!” meetings.

This would’ve been accurate a year ago.
I agree with the previous posters who mentioned Russell Pearce. He should be #2 on the list. Not quite to the level of Glenn Beck, but definitely worse than advocating torture.

I wonder what Russel Pearce and Chris Buttars gave Steve Evans in exchange for keeping off the list. Maybe Pearce promised to exempt Canadian immigrants from that whole show-me-your-papers thing. I don’t even want to speculate on what Buttars offered (!).

The most hated Mormon in Missouri is Sister Z. I’m nice enough not to use her full name so that others are not afflicted with the sickness she spreads.
Sister Z is the Boy Scout Czar and we all bow to her will. She controls who gets scout projects signed off and is the gatekeeper to the Land of Oz, also known as Eagle Scout Project Completion.
She terrorizes parents and children alike, knowing no Scout will pass through the golden gates without proper sucking up to her.
She surely deserves a place on your list.

Perhaps #42 can tell us why the word “sickness” is used with Boy Scouts & Eagle Scout Projects. This year is the 199th anniversary of Scouting. The LDS Church was the first to adopt Scouting as its youth program. A full page article on the national jamboree was in the Church News last week. Language like that message could be applied to those who frequent the Temple or those who promote missionary work. I prefer to look at the good in people. I suggest that everyone do that also.

I don’t mind using the word “sickness” in conjunction with the BSA. (Of course, that’s probably because I just received a calling where my whole job is to interface with the BSA, and I am feeling particularly hateful . . . )

(And if you are wondering why, it is because people like Sister Z exist not only in Missouri and not only in the church. The BSA is full of czars. Sidenote: I wonder if Sister Z is such a czar because the BSA is the only church-sanctioned organization she can wield such power? She doesn’t have that kind of power in any church auxiliary.)

#30–
Buttars has been pretty quiet ever since the church endorsed the anti-discrimination think in Salt Lake. I think that shocked him to silence (or maybe he had a change of heart). In any case, I think his silence has warranted taking him off such a short list. There are certainly other local Utah politicians who deserve to be on it, though. I don’t actually know if they’re LDS or not, but Mike Noel and Sandstrom come to mind.

Let me clarify, I thought that comments 40, 58, and 59 were sexist. I was not talkign about the original post.

Now that you’ve brought it up, though, there is a difference between saying that a man is unusually handsome and commenting on a woman’s one good photo, or her looks from the neck up only. The implication is that it is alright for men to be average, and when they are above average, it is commented on. (i.e. Anderson Cooper as the silver fox etc.) The implication for women is that they are expected to be beautiful, and when they’re not, then it’s fair game to mock them.

You left off all High Counselor Sacrament speakers. No one loves them. Everyone moans and groans through their lame attempts at jokes that are as old as dust. Their analogies do not work, and they drone on forever. And the best thing about hating the entire group is it is apolitical! We would hate the high counselor giving a speech whether he was a right wing fascist OR a leftist pinko commie.

I’m with Karen H. women need better treatment in this post and comments. For instance, why is only one women is on your list of most hated? You are so sexist that you only love to hate powerful political men. From now on we should all love to hate an equal number of women. And to make things fair, I suggest that all future posts of this nature have six spots lest any gender be overly represented.

Karen H. – You are right, I apologize, seriously. So let me be equal opportunity, and not discriminating, by commenting on Mitt. One of the biggest criticisms of Mitt is that he is “too perfect,” which leads to a disconnect with the rest of us voters. And this “too perfect” comment stems in large part from his imagine, which in turn begins with his choice of and careful coiffure (neck up). Now if he went for more of an executive mullet, or something else to offset that image, then I think more Americans would like him.

You know, when it comes to Mormons in general (including Mormon public figures), I’ve adapted Ronald Regan’s stance on his Republican brethren. Thus, “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican” becomes “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Mormons.”

Now, if the title of this post were changed to Mormons we’re annoyed by then maybe I could get behind it a bit. I’d add just about every Mormon who has ever been on any Reality TV programming.

This is the only #1 spot Glenn Beck deserves. I used to watch him on Headline News, and he seemed like a decent enough fellow, but it went south once he moved to GOPTV. I have a friend who works at a radio station that airs Beck’s program, someone who has very good connections in the radio industry, and apparently Beck replaced his alcoholism with conspiracy theories. He started cutting connections once he moved to Fox, because “too much was getting out.” &c.

Thing is, Beck isn’t much different from your average conspiracy theorist who spreads “9/11 Truth” propaganda on message boards. The techniques are practically the same, but the mediums are different. While one only has an Internet connection, Beck has a cult of personality. It’s upsetting that someone who’s so dead wrong on…well, everything, is able to spread his filth throughout the population.

I have to nominate Indiana Jones. What can you say about someone that grew up in Southern Utah, looks for buried relics of inestimable worth to mankind, and still refuses to come out in the open and confess he is a Mormon?

For that matter I nominate all Mormons who hide who they are, especially in Hollywood.

Here are some more nominees for most hated Mormons:

Gary Kurtz Producer of Star Wars. (Was his name even on the credits for the first two Star Wars movies?)

James E. Reilly who produced Passions a soap opera on T.V. cancelled a number of years ago.

Ed Catmull who started Pixar and now runs all the animation at Walt Disney studios.

These and others who remain hidden, live their lives, and let people like Stephenie Meyer receive a lot of hate, but they don’t because they hide their true identity.

Quiz question: How many Anti-Mormons have watched all the Pixar movies (now Disney), The Star Wars Movies, and can look you straight in eyes and say that “those Mormons are a cult”?

Take a look at the movies your kids are watching… (self professed) Anti-Mormons. And who is it that produced all these movies?

There are a lot of movies that are made, but which ones are your children naturally attracted to? And the ones that you (Anti-Mormons) like the most?

Would Star Wars have sold less tickets if Gary Kurtz was featured in the credits?

Maybe so.

Personally I would like to see Ed Catmull in a commercial that ends with the statement “I started Pixar, I make all these movies that your kids love… and yes, I am Mormon.”

But guys like that are Mormon, they pull the strings on pretty much anything good that is happening in Hollywood and America, but they can’t and won’t admit who they are.

They do this out of fear for their jobs, and for fear they will be grey listed, and lose their career.

So what. Stand up and be counted. What do you think the rest of us have to go through?

The thing I like about Stephenie Meyer is she came right out, right at the beginning when she was becoming rich and famous, and said that she was a Mormon. Maybe Ed Catmull, and other movers and shakers in Hollywood and elsewhere could do the same.

Wow–out of all the names mentioned (including beyond the first 5), I am related to one and have met or been in the same ward with several others. I never knew I was in the presence of such evil (except for the one I’m related to). I like Glenn.